The trade group for Germany’s music industry says the counterfeiter was exploiting a rise in popularity of vinyl across Europe, with more investigations underway.

A large stockpile of counterfeit music has been discovered in the southern Germany town of Esslingen. Authorities have taken into custody a 60-year-old man who they say has been using profession equipment to manufacture fake copies of physical music for years. Late last week, investigators raided a large storage facility filled with more than 8,000 boxes containing two million illegally manufactured CDs, DVDs, and vinyl records, which the accused had evidently produced in Poland and other Eastern European countries. According to police, the illicit goods weighed several tons.

The man sold the pirated goods through the Internet and numerous record exchanges frequented by rare vinyl seekers. Numerous machines and devices required in the production of the contraband have been seized. After receiving a tip-off from within the piracy scene, the German Federal Music Industry Association (BVMI) commenced investigations together with police and other authorities. Under the code name "Mitschnitt", they discovered the highly professional structures and then stepped in to put an end to them.

Working in conjunction with Hamburg-based law firm Rasch, BVMI discovered all the distribution channels and seized an estimated one million vinyl records that were still stored in boxes. Experts estimate that the loss caused by the illicit goods is in excess of EUR 30 million ($31.8 million). However, there has been no official confirmation of this figure.

According to police sources, the accused man, who sold the pirated goods like a normal wholesaler, faces a prison sentence of up to five years.